You're A Better Artist Than You Think

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024

Комментарии • 841

  • @Kiddo_04
    @Kiddo_04 Год назад +4886

    I needed this

  • @winklerdraws
    @winklerdraws Год назад +3933

    With time, you begin to let your ego go, and instead of comparing yourself in a negative way, you look at other artist's work and think: 'so it's possible to get at this level'. It becomes a parameter :D

    • @brodawg1591
      @brodawg1591 Год назад +33

      Very true

    • @user-ug9gw8lf1q
      @user-ug9gw8lf1q Год назад +14

      Yes I need your help thanks for your maitre

    • @commentbot9510
      @commentbot9510 Год назад +62

      I can think that way until I learn the artist’s age and it all falls apart. Otherwise, I just am so overwhelmed by how they rendered their drawing and have no idea how to achieve the same effect! Anatomy, form, pose, etc or the just the lines are easy to learn because I can see what I need to do.

    • @code_Rei
      @code_Rei Год назад +2

      ive been reading blue lock and that is isagi isnt it

    • @justaguywithagoodphoto4801
      @justaguywithagoodphoto4801 Год назад +8

      I look at other artists artwork, i compare myself to them, sometimes in a negative way but also to help me see what i can do and give myself the click i need to knowing what to do

  • @TheMrheaty
    @TheMrheaty Год назад +2721

    'Comparison is the thief of joy'

  • @notnavlookaway
    @notnavlookaway Год назад +987

    i felt a little discouraged when I saw Steve Hustons work, but when I got to know that he spent 40yrs mastering that craft whereas I had spent just a few months. It puts things into perspective.

    • @lonestarr1490
      @lonestarr1490 Год назад +17

      But then I remember that I'm already 35, so who knows if there even are another 40yrs on the table...

    • @benparo171
      @benparo171 Год назад +58

      @@lonestarr1490 age doesn’t matter man, nobody knows if they have another 40 years what matters is using the time you have for what makes you smile!

    • @zzodysseuszz
      @zzodysseuszz Год назад +8

      Man I compare myself to kentaro miura and I’ve spent like 5 years trying to draw better so I can match him and haven’t made any progress at all

    • @zenlaeth
      @zenlaeth Год назад +6

      @@zzodysseuszz Me too bro, Miura is my model

    • @kalebgonzales4009
      @kalebgonzales4009 Год назад +5

      @@zzodysseuszz haha, no worries SpongeBob me boy. 5 years is considered “meh level.” And maybe 3 more years is “Meh but with an “Ah!” moment. It takes more years to develop and you will get there even if it takes you into your 50’s

  • @nidusyaldabaoth2428
    @nidusyaldabaoth2428 Год назад +302

    I’m glad my phone not only spies on me, but also read my mind. This is just what I needed to hear.

    • @goat1408
      @goat1408 Год назад +3

      Same lol

    • @nidusyaldabaoth2428
      @nidusyaldabaoth2428 Год назад +10

      @@goat1408 I watched another video from another RUclips art/Architech channel, they said the one thing people often forget is how much thought and time an artist puts into the subject before the camera rolls.

  • @richbailey819
    @richbailey819 Год назад +547

    Instagram does not show you the many years the artist spent working to get that good. You are looking at the top of an iceberg of training and experience!

    • @vdostarr
      @vdostarr Год назад +17

      what a great analogy

    • @miochii
      @miochii Год назад +1

      that's exactly what i was thinking a few days ago while practicing on my sketchbook

    • @melonachii
      @melonachii 9 месяцев назад +1

      but what if someone who has actively been drawing for less time is better than me

    • @richbailey819
      @richbailey819 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@melonachii why does that matter? Perhaps they have aptitudes that allow them to pick the skills up faster. Or they have a better training method. If you feel like your progress is slower than you want then you need to examine your training methods and find something that works better. There are countless approaches to learning and some of them will click better than others. Comparing your progress to others is a surefire way to get discouraged. Your progress is a personal thing and there will be peaks, troughs, and plateaus. Focus on you and what you enjoy.

    • @melonachii
      @melonachii 9 месяцев назад

      thanks, im more motivated to practice now@@richbailey819

  • @angelinemarsland
    @angelinemarsland Год назад +213

    100% . I followed a ton of artists to be inspired but I find I actually get more overwhelmed and discouraged by being saturated with artists-my age, younger, and older-that seemed to have already accomplished so much more. Better to digest inspiration more slowly to match one’s growth

    • @Padraigp
      @Padraigp Год назад +8

      I totally agree i sometimes have an idea and then I might google it and find aomone else already had that idea and even better and did it better. And then that makes my thing seem lame. If I didnt know about it id be like wow look what I made. Same with cooking sometimes I " invent" a recipe and then find out its already a thing. Or like I Baker cakes and then I see next level decorations and im like oh... mines just a cake. Lol! I also feel like the more you put in the less comes out. When you sit in a blank room with no tv or input then stuff starts to come out which is great.

    • @sitdogsit78248
      @sitdogsit78248 Год назад +8

      It is overwhelming but don't compare yourself. I guarantee you you both are great artists. Just keep perfecting your talent ❤

    • @Padraigp
      @Padraigp Год назад +6

      @@sitdogsit78248 thank you thats so nice. I just swuashed blackberries on my chopping board to see what would happen and made a nice pattern! Lol i bet that is original if nothing else! I wont google it!

  • @williambarrett1234
    @williambarrett1234 Год назад +231

    the process is the fun part honestly. If you stop feeling like you NEED to be good. When you've achieved "good" that feeling lasts 10 seconds i swear

    • @Scarshadow666
      @Scarshadow666 Год назад +10

      Very true! I know that in my experience drawing, just being in the moment with the process (as well as being able to trust it) can be one of the hardest things to remember. ^^;

    • @secakaizenart
      @secakaizenart Год назад

      True

    • @ChaoticSiIence
      @ChaoticSiIence Год назад

      True lol

    • @taewoods2034
      @taewoods2034 Год назад +1

      Facts bro

    • @milmundos
      @milmundos 6 месяцев назад

      True. I was kind of disapointed when he said if you were satisfied with your level you would have no motivation to improve. But you do improve by consistency and joyfull exploration of new techniques and avenues. Dissatisfaction need not to be a drive. And that is how you should look at other artists, like examples of ways to do it. Specially nowadays where all of the greatest artists you admire are sharing tips and tricks, or at least showing you their process, if not for giving away totaly free tutorials.

  • @venzarez-ili680
    @venzarez-ili680 Год назад +319

    I'm a slow learner and I get anxious when watching speed paint.
    Already, I'm moving the goal post, it's like shooting a moving target.

    • @winterillust
      @winterillust Год назад +38

      watching those speed-paints really messes with your head and perception of how long it takes to draw sth. been there not fun.

    • @coins_png
      @coins_png Год назад +23

      DON'T watch speedpaints.
      If you like an artist, find if they have a livestreamed vod of their process and often. it's up in multitudes of hours.
      Even then it's often not the entire process.
      Watching just speedpaints cost me months of progress. The worst part is how it makes drawing look like "just do the thing" while often artist have different ways to come up with an idea for a piece.
      The timelapse only shows the "How" part and not the "What". You just gotta keep track of both if you're hoping to get any wanted results.

    • @coins_png
      @coins_png Год назад +5

      @@winterillust sorry. I meant to reply to your comment

    • @venzarez-ili680
      @venzarez-ili680 Год назад +5

      @@coins_png how did I not think of that? I have to do this slowly from now on until I get used to it. Thank you for that💯

    • @tvteletoon5300
      @tvteletoon5300 Год назад +5

      It's not that drawing is hard it's just that it takes time to make a masterpiece

  • @helenehenderson7499
    @helenehenderson7499 Год назад +254

    I don’t get discouraged. I get motivated. It depends on which side if the coin you look at. The negative side or positive side.

    • @mrmawster9786
      @mrmawster9786 Год назад +43

      I get also get motivated but as soon as the pencil touch the paper all that motivation and expectations is shattered to pieces 😅

    • @MilanLS7
      @MilanLS7 Год назад +16

      @@mrmawster9786 Keep going, essentially you’re building a bridge in your mind so the creativity can flow. The more you draw, the more you see to be drawn☀️

    • @adonis4497
      @adonis4497 Год назад +2

      ​@@mrmawster9786 this guy chose to cite facts rather than the comment

    • @mochisun9190
      @mochisun9190 Год назад +5

      Looking for this comment. I hate that people think it's automatically a bad think to compare. If I never had anyone to look up to and chase, I would be so bad at art. It's exactly because of all these amazing insta artists that I get the motivation to push on and be like them! Some ppl need an example

    • @whitleywilburn2999
      @whitleywilburn2999 Год назад

      Same. Im really inspired to understand how they created their work. To solve problems and see if I can’t incorporate that into my work!

  • @Sk8junk
    @Sk8junk Год назад +5

    This is why instead of comparing yourself to someone you should appreciate their talents and efforts and push yourself to aim higher

  • @meyramerah
    @meyramerah Год назад +70

    That Bob Ross plushie in the back sparks so much joy

    • @ProkoTV
      @ProkoTV  Год назад +16

      I'm so happy anytime anyone notices it in there haha

  • @johngolden891
    @johngolden891 11 месяцев назад +2

    It's encouraging to keep examples of your own artistic attempts and gauge your progress in terms of improvement in your own work as you combine what you of learned from the artists you imitate plus some original aspects of your own.

  • @alifishies
    @alifishies Год назад +37

    I once had a panic attack the day before the start of an art education program because I thought I had to be Leonardo Davinchi. Like, the website literally only said that you should have an intrest for art and all of the pictures of students works weren't astonishingly good. My brain isn't capable of looking at the bigger picture sometimes. At least I enjoy art and won't quit it because I'm "really bad" at it and totally not because I haven't invested as much time and effort into it 😃

    • @ProkoTV
      @ProkoTV  Год назад +21

      Our own brains can be our worst critics sometimes! They'll set our expectations for ourselves way too high.
      We have just have to try to do good work that we actually go and show to the world sometimes. That way, we can get some positive feedback to help push back against our own brains a little.

  • @jeremycu4571
    @jeremycu4571 Год назад +8

    "If you are satisfied with your skill level, you have no motivation to improve" Very true words.
    Dont see comparison as somthing you should have now, see it as somthing you can reach one day.
    Keep it steady, keep it consistent. Many artist who can draw very realistic things did not start that way, but steadily kept rising.

  • @CoolFishFunk
    @CoolFishFunk 11 месяцев назад +2

    I feel like it would be really good for popular artists to show failed WIPS, art they dont like, etc, once in a while. I feel like it could motivate ppl and show that even their idols aren’t perfect.

  • @Scarshadow666
    @Scarshadow666 3 месяца назад +4

    What's great about this is that it can apply to so many other aspects of life, including art/media and sketching! There's a lot of messed-up areas of our lives where people can do unfair comparisons between themselves and others (how the beauty industry markets it's products being an infamous example), and it's why it's important to be mindful when we start unfairly comparing ourselves to others.
    Regardless of what people think of Theodore Roosevelt, his quote "Comparison is the thief of joy" fits perfectly.

  • @Kanegane
    @Kanegane 6 месяцев назад +3

    YES, THIS! I always have my mindset as “there’s no such things as talents, only how long people learn”, i personally really enjoyed my art improvement even though it’s slow. Don’t get discouraged if there’s someone better than you, get fired up and start to practice more! Don’t compare your arts with other people’s arts, compare it to your old arts and see how far you’ve come and give yourself a good job for working really hard to get to this day.

  • @plnene
    @plnene Год назад +20

    This happens to me a lot where I feel discouraged because everywhere in my feed there are my peers and professional artists that are way advanced than me and doing a lot better with their art. Thank you for reminding me again and it’s a hard journey for every artist but motivation, learning and time will payoff!

  • @PHyN1151
    @PHyN1151 Год назад +25

    Yes, indeed i'am often feel discouraged everytime i see other great art and became hopeless, but everytime i see an art that is good but easy to draw it couraged me again, motivated me make me say "This is piece a cake, i can draw it."

  • @captngravity
    @captngravity 11 дней назад

    I never get discouraged seeing better art than mine. It encourages me and gets me excited to keep going.

  • @etwrnity
    @etwrnity Год назад +21

    yep. i improved so much after i stopped going on Instagram all the time. it allowed me to be alone with my art and I realized that "hey, I actually want to learn how to draw wtf!"

    • @tvteletoon5300
      @tvteletoon5300 Год назад +1

      Well if you can't be like them then maybe try to make your own style in art hehe

  • @Combsstudio
    @Combsstudio Год назад +14

    I’m always trying to better myself. I did a portrait a week in pen and ink to get better with proportions. Then I started working on inanimate objects. Now I’m about to start on landscapes and background. With the people and objects, I have started stylizing. After I feel I get some understanding with background, I will work on storytelling (plan on being there by mid summer).

    • @ProkoTV
      @ProkoTV  Год назад +5

      That's a good plan!

    • @Combsstudio
      @Combsstudio Год назад +3

      Thanks! I meant that in the sense that I use other artists as motivation to take the next step. When I see someone on social media, I try to break down what they are doing and how to do. Granted, I can and do get frustrated because I’m not able get something how I want the first time. However, it’s like that saying, “it doesn’t matter how hard you hit, it’s how hard you get knocked down and keep getting back up.” I figure out my issue and adjust and go at it again and again.

    • @tvteletoon5300
      @tvteletoon5300 Год назад +4

      Yeah and since the main key in art is imagination to draw what you want to portray

  • @Oak_Eggar
    @Oak_Eggar 5 месяцев назад +1

    Sometimes I look at my old sketchbooks, it makes me realise that I’ve gotten way better, and I actually understand some of what I’m doing, it’s a good practice for me personally

  • @FagunMukherjee
    @FagunMukherjee 3 месяца назад +7

    The video : 🙂
    The doll in the pelvic area in the background : 💀

    • @Scarshadow666
      @Scarshadow666 3 месяца назад +2

      Lol, that's what some artists' studios and work areas/desks are like! Sometimes ideas get tossed around and some of them unintentionally exude uncanny-valley territory. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

  • @callmesacred9469
    @callmesacred9469 Год назад +1

    To anyone who is striving to become a better artist, whether just starting out, trying to go from intermediate to the next level, learning new styles, or perfecting your own, learn to manage your expectations. You cannot compare yourself to professional artists, and you should not, they are, professionals for a reason, but you can use them, their techniques, and ability as good steps for yourself. If you can manage your expectations they you will be proud of your progress and be left more fulfilled overall, it’s a skill that is very useful for learning, you are not born with it, it’s something you must learn, but as always keep striving to improve, you got this :)

  • @grrimmm
    @grrimmm Год назад +4

    i’ve had to tell myself this countless times, but hearing it from someone else makes me feel so much better 😭❤️ thank you

  • @ellafrost4296
    @ellafrost4296 4 месяца назад +1

    I had a rough patch with my confidence for a while when I was younger. I’ve been improving gradually over time, but my younger cousin is amazing and has a steep learning curve. Even though I started seriously learning earlier than her, she zoomed by me in terms of skill and improvement. I’ve since gotten over the soreness and have been trying to rethink how I view my own goals for developing skill. I try not to look at the amazing artists I follow as ‘they’re so much better than me’ and instead think of it as ‘what about their art do I like and how can I learn to do it too?’.

  • @jos234
    @jos234 17 дней назад

    Every artist needs to hear this, I knew this but feels great hearing it from someone else

  • @Vermillion37
    @Vermillion37 21 день назад

    I never compare my work to anyone else’s, and my drive to improve doesn’t come from a lack of satisfaction but a love for drawing and a desire to see my characters and ideas in even greater detail. Plus it’s just so fun!!

  • @oekeopro5079
    @oekeopro5079 2 месяца назад

    Actually seeing people that draw so good encourages me

  • @Omnipotentpunch03
    @Omnipotentpunch03 Год назад +3

    I think it’s important for people to know that they CAN get better and they CAN match or even surpass those they look up to. We should also always remind ourselves that talent is nothing more than a head start so to speak. It doesn’t matter if you have loads of talent or none at all, you can and will get to where you want to be as long as you put in time and effort.

  • @garzapinups
    @garzapinups Год назад +2

    When I see some of my favorites working, I then get a boost of “I need to get up right now and paint.” It’s a nice feeling

  • @stanbai5263
    @stanbai5263 Год назад +11

    I am far from a beginner and I will still look at someone else's art and be like, "Wow, I suck"

  • @TocharaehD
    @TocharaehD 2 месяца назад

    We legit need this podcast back running.

  • @dynamitedrawingwithjesse9235
    @dynamitedrawingwithjesse9235 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks guys I needed to hear this.

  • @mxnt.ie456
    @mxnt.ie456 Год назад

    My friend has always been so much better than I am at art, and he learned so fast, and it made me have such a shitty outlook on my art, and now it's really bothering me to the point where it isn't healthy. I sincerely needed this.

  • @marastia
    @marastia Год назад +1

    This is why I try and follow artists at all skill levels. 1 - to help support smaller artists and 2 - to help remind myself that it’s a journey. And we all start off somewhere

  • @puffoffluffedair543
    @puffoffluffedair543 9 месяцев назад +1

    I feel like I was a “fast beginner” as kid where drawing just came easy to me so once it required a little more effort, I felt like I was failing and got scared and discouraged. I rmbr sitting in still life drawing classes and for two hrs beating myself up over spheres, cubes and sculptures and literally holding back tears bc I was so frustrated. I stopped going to classes bc of my crippling perfectionism and didn’t know it at the time. I had a big ego with zero self esteem, so my skill never caught up with my expectations. I rlly regret not sticking it through those classes and allowing myself to make mistakes. So now I’m gonna enjoy my slow zone although I still feel in a rush to master everything, that mindset in the end will only become overwhelming.

  • @Ayl_os
    @Ayl_os Год назад +1

    It used to be very discouraging to compare my art with those I look up to.
    It’s been 7 years since I started drawing as a hobby and now when I compare my art to how it used to look I feel disgusted with what I used to make and it makes me happy if my improvement.
    I think I’m good, but before I publish any of my art I’d like to reach a level at least somewhat comparable to where I’d like to be. Looking at people I follow now shows me a goal that isn’t so far anymore, I’m just going to need to get more serious about this to pull through.
    To any artists struggling with motivation, just draw whatever is fun to you and maybe abstain from social media for a bit, draw a lot and then draw the comparison to the start of the week. I wish you best of luck!

  • @azechase6597
    @azechase6597 Год назад

    "if you were satisfied with your skill level you would have no motivation to improve" that's the part that really matters to me bc I always get people who don't understand why I'm always so critical of my own art. I'm happy with how far I've come but I'm not happy with where I am so I'll keep going.

  • @Dragonslayer_1215
    @Dragonslayer_1215 4 месяца назад +1

    Also you should be analyzing and learning from those artist you enjoy, pick up tricks and techniques that you see to make your own unique spin in your art

  • @taocomics
    @taocomics 3 месяца назад

    I've found the most inspiration in communities with supportive artists who engage and give feedback, building alongside those near my skill level, and avoiding homogeneous "it" styles. There's no need to compare yourself to others. For the most part, compete with where you've been instead of where you think your should be. The answers and abilities will come.

  • @Chair_0809
    @Chair_0809 10 месяцев назад

    I always loved looking at better artists and would try to replicate the technique so I could be a better artist ☺️

  • @GoldenLeafsMovies
    @GoldenLeafsMovies Год назад +3

    Honestly, looking at other people's work, sometimes inspires me. It's looking at my own work and comparing it to how I would've liked to have been that discourages me.

    • @ProkoTV
      @ProkoTV  Год назад +4

      I hear this one a lot too. It's hard to set realistic expectations for yourself.
      If you can make something and feel that you got most of the way there to what you envisioned, that's a success.
      The more you learn and the better you get, the more you'll expect from yourself. You'll always be just behind what you aim to make. Learning to recognize you got most of the way there is good.

  • @grimmskid8060
    @grimmskid8060 Год назад

    Fine arts from painting, drawing, instruments and singing can bless you with talents but there’s such a wide variety of skills and styles it doesn’t matter how talented you are if you don’t continue to endlessly learn and practice

  • @jacquelineminer3899
    @jacquelineminer3899 Год назад

    I have a hard time sometimes because people around me don’t understand sketching in a sketchbook and think every piece of work needs to be a masterpiece. I enjoy just sketching and doodling. It’s good to develop skills and get ideas for bigger projects, but after some comments I doubt myself. Nice to see Marshall.

  • @Willowposting
    @Willowposting Год назад +1

    I always tell people that anyone can draw, and that talent is not something that makes you unnaturally good at something right away.
    It can make you more inclined towards that thing, but it still needs to be trained and honed like anything else.
    Nobody gets ripped in just a day, and nobody gets amazing at drawing in a single day, either.
    I've been drawing since I was very small, and even now, at almost 21 years of age, there are wayyyy too many things I have yet to even try let alone improve on.
    Art is a never ending path of growth. That path has many twists, turns, and branches.
    You have to take the first step on that path.

  • @Devill4010.
    @Devill4010. 28 дней назад

    Seeing someone who is better at art than me makes me more motivated to get better than I am now

  • @pyros.
    @pyros. Год назад

    As a 3d artist learning character creation I'm always in awe at the characters I see other artists make. But then I actually take a minute to think about it.
    They've been doing it professionally for 10+ years.
    I've been learning it on my own for 3 years. Just gotta keep grinding and eventually I'll get there, but not before finding someone elses work I admire.

  • @popeshabba4266
    @popeshabba4266 4 месяца назад

    Idk I see good artists on instagram and it’s more inspiring than anything. Makes me feel like “oh man I can’t wait to keep drawing and hopefully I’ll get to that level someday”.

    • @ProkoTV
      @ProkoTV  4 месяца назад

      That's how we should look at it! Some people end up feeling the opposite.
      Seeing how good other artists are only means that skill is possible!

  • @Tonywizart
    @Tonywizart 9 месяцев назад +1

    I use other artists to understand their philosophy so I can improve my own, I have no problem whatsoever looking at work that inspires me

  • @Msannamitta
    @Msannamitta Год назад +13

    the piller of worry was my dad. He was brilliant. I never saw anything like what came from his hand in art. But Proko's art education align with what my father's approach art where (pretty darn close) like how to sharpen a pencil, how to hold a pencil, light source (my dad sat me down for that lecture lol). This is a good time to be an Artist. Anyways you always learn something or try something but this takes time. Or you see something like a Sorolla and think oh man I gotta do that lol . 👍 short video always hits insightful!

    • @nonenone2669
      @nonenone2669 Год назад

      You're so lucky to have a dad who knows how to draw. I would be begging my parents to lecture me on what they know.
      You have an art teacher in your home who can teach you for free. Lucky You!

  • @XPR-hx2wf
    @XPR-hx2wf Год назад +2

    You should not be discouraged by anything. There is always going to be someone better than you doesn’t matter if you are playing sports or making art. Everyone has their own unique style.

  • @KGxStar1
    @KGxStar1 Год назад

    I started 3D modelling on blender, been learning for 3 weeks now, and I haven't improved past making a decent katana, I keep comparing myself with professionals on RUclips that have been doing it their whole life, and it got demotivated and almost gave up, I really needed this. Thank you.

  • @kaiapparent2653
    @kaiapparent2653 Год назад

    i’ve never really been i to drawing but some weeks ago i started. it’s been a fun bht difficult start, i was so frustrated and discouraged because i couldn’t seem to get it right, but when i compare my first tries to me recent ones, i can see an improvement. i realised that like you said i was trying to compare myself to professionals or people with much more experience, and it was slowing down my progress. thanks for this!

  • @ber08eira
    @ber08eira Год назад +3

    I remember the first time I got into the art classroom where I had classes and saw all those paintings so beautiful and realistic and I remember thinking "I'm never going to be able to do such things". Five years later I was painting Arnold Schwarzenegger in a 100×70 canvas 😂

  • @Dannyboy314
    @Dannyboy314 Год назад

    My father who was a great drawer always said the most important skill is to learn how to see. If you eyes can't guide your pencil, forget about drawing. That's a mindset I still use so often when I just look a things I convert it into drawings in my head. I will never get as good as my dad, but he thought me alot, and definitely gave some of his skills to me.

  • @melaniereeder2349
    @melaniereeder2349 Год назад +1

    Intellectually I’m aware that the only way to improve is to not give up and not care how bad your art is as first. But I definitely find myself getting discouraged without realizing it and avoiding trying because of that

  • @StupiditySam
    @StupiditySam 9 месяцев назад

    I started drawing when i was 4 and when i was 8 or 9 i just didnt draw jack, but now i try to keep my motivation afloat but this channel is the sole reason my motivation for art.

  • @ShadowStormray
    @ShadowStormray Год назад

    I felt like i suck for a long time, now i just take inspiration and take notes from the people i follow to learn. And now i actually love slowly learning to get better and see my own journey

  • @Goferf
    @Goferf 10 месяцев назад

    I recommend looking at your old art and redrawing it. It made me feel a lot more proud of my art.

  • @rabiesbiter5681
    @rabiesbiter5681 Год назад

    I only ever knew two people who I can say for sure had artistic talent. I knew both when I was a kid. The first of the two -- slightly older -- had a pretty amazing knack for drawing from an early age. First time I saw one of her drawings, I was blown away. And as she grew older, she could read an art book in a sitting and just absorb and use all the information. She didn't have to study, but study made her better. The other, I pretty much babysat by the time I met her, and she was churning out stunning, nearly photorealistic images already. Apparently, that started the first time she touched a crayon. Some people are just born with a capacity you aren't which they didn't learn and can't teach -- and you'll never catch up with them. Those people are very few. Compared to them, the rest of us are on a pretty even playing field.

  • @carl6982
    @carl6982 Год назад +1

    I think a positive outlook on this is to see those reels and videos of hella talented artists and try improving yourself, like, get inspired! And keep drawing and doodling cause thats the only way you can really get better 👊🙏🙏 i hope it helps for someone reading (:) and that you try it yourself, cause theres always gonna be someone thats quite on quote "better" 💗but theres never gonna someone as unique and special as you 🤗 so dont ever get embarrased to show your art, no doubt in my mind youre gonna be a hell of a great artist too ❤️❤️❤️ stay safe 💕

  • @SophiaWisdomTarot
    @SophiaWisdomTarot 7 месяцев назад +1

    The good thing about me is when I see videos like those they don’t make me discourage they make me motivated

  • @jessicabrauman
    @jessicabrauman 3 месяца назад

    There is a concept in psychology called the reference group, which is the people with which you compare yourself and your progress to. A realistic reference group is really important for healthy self esteem and skill building.
    A problem with the internet is that you can accidentally make all these amazing, talented people around the world your reference group, and feel shitty about yourself. But in reality, those people might be one in a million in terms of talent, or might have had decades of practice (or both).
    Joining a local art group, making some arty frirnds or signing up for classes can be really useful for developing a better reference group. Plus, when you know each other IRL, you can learn from each other and see each other's progress.

  • @Alpaska
    @Alpaska Год назад

    I used to get discouraged but recently, following tons of artists motivate me to create my own work :)

  • @hipphopp69yearsago34
    @hipphopp69yearsago34 Год назад +8

    You don't know how much I needed to hear this today

  • @NotSoMax
    @NotSoMax Год назад +1

    As artists we also rarely post our bad art, when you only see the end product you can lose track of not just the work that went into that one piece but also the work that helped them develop their skills, I’ve got countless extra trash sculpts that’ve never seen the light of day that got me to where I am today

  • @AidanTheGaymer
    @AidanTheGaymer Год назад

    My childhood best friend and I just confessed to each other that for 12 years we have been using each other to motivate ourselves. One would draw something the other was struggling with, so the other would get competitive and become determined to draw it better. We've spent 12 years one upping each other without realizing it was mutual haha. We both still feel the same way, but we're showering each other with compliments. It's a blessing and I'm glad we've realized what we've been doing.

  • @shadowm2k7
    @shadowm2k7 Год назад +1

    My Art stayed the same with absolutely zero improvements from ages 16-26. 10 years!!!!! I became an artist full time 3 years ago and my art has improved MASSIVELY from just drawing every day!
    Even as recent as last night im still learning and developing new techniques! Finally can draw smoke properly on paper lol

  • @akira-neeski
    @akira-neeski Год назад

    I just compliment every artist i see, beginner or pro. Believe me "jokingly hating" on someone hurts a lot more than it seems.

  • @horumbra7080
    @horumbra7080 2 месяца назад

    "Those who do not doubt in their art, achive small things." - Leonardo Da Vinci

  • @leakypeach6250
    @leakypeach6250 Год назад

    I just picked up drawing last week at 25 years old. Something that kept me from attempting it in the past was comparing myself to established artists like this. But since picking it up, looking at these masters only motivates me to get better tbh

  • @WomenScareMe913
    @WomenScareMe913 Год назад +1

    This applies to everything, art, dance, sports, singing, stripping, music, grammar, looks, etc

  • @Diceverses
    @Diceverses Год назад +1

    Speed draws also massively contribute to this feeling. When you watch something gorgeous come together so quickly you tend to forget that it actually took the artist hours to create that painting. Then you try to draw for the same ten minutes, obviously get much worse results and feel disappointed in yourself.

  • @mixtapebang
    @mixtapebang Год назад +5

    I really needed this reminder.
    Art school can get so motivating and inspiring, but it can also be so discouraging when classmates have these rapid improvements, or just start off objectively better than you. You question whether you'll ever catch up... I try really hard to just be inspired by them, but can't help those jealous feelings.

  • @Deausit
    @Deausit Год назад

    I used to compare myself to my favorite artist, so I was stuck with the same style and way I used to draw. Now I use their drawing to learn, I learn how they do things and learn their techniques. It's the best way to improve for me :)

  • @ronizzlepiw
    @ronizzlepiw Год назад

    I seen one of my current fav artist say "The key to becoming a great tattoo artist is: Stop comparing urself to other artists!" Everyone has their own journey, appreciate other peoples art, but focus on progressing (not perfecting) urs.

  • @nonenone2669
    @nonenone2669 Год назад +1

    I'm two years (one year I spent drawing without guidelines/help, my second year i started watching Proko and other videos for help) into drawing almost consistently every day. I have had 2-3 month dry spells, but nonetheless, i get back at it..and I am still not as good as I wish I was..
    but everytime I begin a new difficult hobby, I tell myself that it is going to take me a at least a year to two years to see some improvement.
    (maybe less time if I would practice more hours/time a day)
    I just accept that it will take me a long time, but that each day, even though I might not see it, I will improve very slightly, and that over time, those slight improvements will stack up on each other.
    I still have a looong way to go, but I feel a lot better at drawing heads and eyes than I did 2 years ago. At least in my opinion i am.
    And two years or even five years might seem like a long time, but those years will pass regardless if you continue practicing or not.
    Don't sit 5 years later and wonder, "hmm, I wonder how good I would be at drawing, playing piano, playing guitar, learning a language, etc. if I had continued practicing for these past five years as consistently as I could instead of have given up?"
    That's how I convince my discouraged brain to keep going.

    • @ProkoTV
      @ProkoTV  Год назад +2

      That's a great way to look at it!
      Unlike some things you learn, learning art still gives you some great things along the way. Every drawing, no matter how you feel about the technique of them, has the potential to be something you look back on fondly. Keep your old sketchbooks around if you can and treasure that direct proof of your improvement.

  • @sethyork1164
    @sethyork1164 Год назад

    Learn to be inspired, I never have this issue because when I see some really good art I dont feel bad, I just feel like I want to get to that point

  • @N_3_Z
    @N_3_Z 2 месяца назад +1

    Great advice, applies to a ton of things too.

  • @doubleozeven1314
    @doubleozeven1314 Год назад

    So sad because I’ve used masterful artists work to look at and study from for more than a decade and I never thought “I suck, I can’t be like them” I always thought “what can I take from their painting and try to replicate into my own art style?” Always! And to this day I just keep getting better.

  • @ExpWizard
    @ExpWizard Год назад

    The no motivation to improve is so true, I get better rapidly and then I slowed down because I was satisfied but it just worked against me

  • @casey_fae
    @casey_fae 3 месяца назад

    I definitely needed to hear this, especially since I’m usually kinda slow when it comes to new things

    • @ProkoTV
      @ProkoTV  3 месяца назад

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @ghostchampion1252
    @ghostchampion1252 Год назад +1

    I’m in the middle of my concept art corses, and let me tell you, I really needed to hear this. It’s really hard for me when I’m going through my classes to not compare my work to my professors. I feel frustrated that my line Art, my ambient occlusion doesn’t make my work “realistic” enough.
    I know I shouldn’t compare, they are professionals active in the industry, but it’s so hard not to want to be better right now.

  • @woojinjung6890
    @woojinjung6890 Год назад

    I used to think and compare in a sort of negative way, but after stepping back a little bit and sort of realizing that.. these are people that have not only been in my exact situation (probably) but have overcome it to become great. It’s such a motivating factor to me and my art now. To see the beautiful and badass renders and say to myself. “Hey, that’s gonna be me someday”. Keep it up everyone. You’re doing great

  • @-un_ji_nom-7503
    @-un_ji_nom-7503 Год назад

    I have thought of that way just for a bit as a beginning artist going into art. I am quick to realize it isn't all just about admiring and being jealous. I can learn by seeing every line they make and gain ideas. I'm not sure if I got all of it, but that's how I am able to draw better and understand more. What I am saying might not help but hope every artist out there that seem to say I like my style no need to improve and want to stay in what they have, and I able to understand and improve. If not, then that's your choice to make and their path to take.

  • @goat1408
    @goat1408 Год назад +2

    All I can do is compare myself to myself....I would've quit long ago comparing myself to others. Good morning, good afternoon, good evening and good night to my fellow artists...if you need daily motivation I'm on RUclips EVERYDAY... I have a daily vlog series (currently on Day 1151), an art video series (currently on Episode 170) and starting to post more shorts. Be encouraged that no one else is YOU. Affirm and confirm your manifestations of greatness.
    1💖.

  • @OHeyChrissy
    @OHeyChrissy Год назад

    I 100% love this video and agree with it.
    We as people as artists were not perfect, but we have this.. mentality to be perfect.
    It's taken me a long time to understand in order to succeed, you have to fail a few times..
    In order to grow, you HAVE to practice. I would look at other artists, and I would (still do) get discouraged, and I just would have no willpower or motivation to draw. Sometimes it would motivate me to do studies and to get better but others I just feel like "why am I still here?" Like I'm stuck but I'm stuck because I've allowed myself to be in this one spot. I refuse to work on myself. Nothing is perfect, but if you don't practice and try, you'll never know what you're capable of.. Maybe one day I will be capable of great things. ❤

  • @Telkkinzz
    @Telkkinzz Год назад +1

    Tbh When I see art on Instagram and Twitter it makes me wanna work even harder and get up from what I’m doing and draw I’m like intermediate rn but I wanna get better

  • @lukarikid9001
    @lukarikid9001 Год назад

    Getting discouraged by viewing good art, as an artist is so true! I deleted Twitter for this very reason.

  • @Manoto17
    @Manoto17 Год назад

    I didn’t know how to put it into words, but yes.
    At the same time though, it gives you something to match or out do.

  • @zaviannaeclipse7588
    @zaviannaeclipse7588 Год назад

    When I'm on the internet and see people create beautiful art I get inspired to strive to be as good as them, learn from them and try to improve my own art

  • @ZapedToSpace
    @ZapedToSpace Год назад

    I actually get really motivated to learn from said artist and attempt to make a similar or even better piece because I honestly have fun making art I compare myself to my past self and the me of today is on another level 😄

  • @Wolfie_Chip
    @Wolfie_Chip Год назад +1

    Yeah, this was pretty much how I thought for most of my life before I finally let loose just recently actually , and I looked at my art from a different angle and realized I was actually pretty good

  • @zappasmoustache23
    @zappasmoustache23 11 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve realised that I place other artists in one of two categories without even thinking about it. There are those who inspire me and just looking at their work instantly makes me want to draw and then there are those that make me go ‘man, what’s the point in even trying, I’ll never be that good.’
    And then I realised that’s ok. Doesn’t mean what i’m doing is not good or valid. I’ve begun to trust the process and have fun learning more along the way.

  • @unidentifiedshrubz
    @unidentifiedshrubz 3 месяца назад

    It's fascinating because I'm also very slow learner and art. I finally gotten to the point that with practice I found out that there's different things I'm really good at. And I've never liked the idea of building up shapes first for anatomy. This is just one of the things I've recently learned, and that is - sometimes having a shape does help, but doing that whole process that everyone does I thought I was just lazy and I just didn't enjoy doing it but turns out it generally doesn't help me cuz I was drawing cats the other day and they looked awful! I knew I could do a cat ESPECIALLY if I can do landscapes and all these other complex things! SO I decided to mess around and I started stippling my line art very gently in the direction I knew I wanted it to be. I did I did a cat standing up and one laying down and both of them... Have almost PERFECT anatomy👀. And I know I suck at anatomy! So I found out the way I do things I've never seen people do before and it works the best for me because I struggle with anatomy so much but those two pieces were beyond skill level that I was aware I had for animals! So I really showed myself last night. Instead of studying the art to find what I like... During that process I more so have to study MYSELF and see what's best for me🥰

  • @faultyclone0013
    @faultyclone0013 Год назад

    This applies to all skills in life
    Things take time to learn but trust in the process. We’ll all get there

  • @boomboomboomboomwantyouinmyrum

    For me, looking at good art of people on the internet serves as inspiration for me to get better.